STATE COLLEGE, PA (March 28, 2023) – Stuckey Automotive, the area’s largest and fastest growing automotive group in Central Pennsylvania, announces the Stuckey Mitsubishi dealership has relocated from 150 Shiloh Road to 3400 East College Avenue in State College, effective Tuesday, March 28th. Concurrently, the group publicizes the dealership will subsequently be known as the Stuckey Mitsubishi Super Centre.
In August 2021, the automotive group purchased the former headquarters of the Centre Daily Times, a 40,000 square foot building, and began to repurpose the building for its sales and service operations in March 2022 using locally-owned businesses when feasible.
At its completion, the facility boasts a vast showroom with industrial finishes, conference rooms, employee areas, and a state-of-the-art service center with 13 two-post vehicle lifts, an alignment lift, and onsite car wash.
“Today has been a long time coming. We began our search for what would be Stuckey Mitsubishi’s permanent location over two years ago. By happenstance the Centre Daily Times was making plans to move their operations right around the same time. When we first toured the building, we could visualize a layout that bears a striking resemblance to what stands today. We knew we were home,” said Matt Stuckey, President of Stuckey Automotive.
In August 2021, the automotive group purchased the former headquarters of the Centre Daily Times, a 40,000 square foot building, and began to repurpose the building for its sales and service operations in March 2022 using locally-owned businesses when feasible.
At its completion, the facility boasts a vast showroom with industrial finishes, conference rooms, employee areas, and a state-of-the-art service center with 13 two-post vehicle lifts, an alignment lift, and onsite car wash.
“Today has been a long time coming. We began our search for what would be Stuckey Mitsubishi’s permanent location over two years ago. By happenstance the Centre Daily Times was making plans to move their operations right around the same time. When we first toured the building, we could visualize a layout that bears a striking resemblance to what stands today. We knew we were home,” said Matt Stuckey, President of Stuckey Automotive.